Coming out of Hinsdale (Ill.), Michelle Sebastian had never played lacrosse until freshman year of college, when she joined the then-club team at Vanderbilt and eventually became one of the program’s first Division I varsity players.
Years later, while coaching at her high school alma mater, she decided it was time to start putting sticks in the hands of young girls much earlier than had been the norm in the non-traditional lacrosse region of Chicagoland.
And thus began the Illinois Girls Lacrosse Association, which Sebastian co-founded in 2006 with community teams for middle school-age girls in Hinsdale and Northbrook. In its 10 years, the IGLA has expanded to 22 locations around Chicago, providing development opportunities for girls as young as age 5.
“I wanted girls to have the opportunity to play before they got to high school, which was only happening in maybe one or two town in all of Illinois,” Sebastian said. “We wanted to give girls, no matter where they grew up, the opportunity to learn lacrosse at a young age.”
Sebastian expects about 2,000 participants for the spring, and excitement seems to have risen since implementing the Lacrosse Athlete Development Model — a US Lacrosse initiative that reimagines how we introduce new players to the sport in an age-appropriate — in the fall. The league is based on the motto “every girl plays.” The IGLA awards scholarships for 5-10 girls who can’t afford to play.